I couldn't find a solution to this problem in Swift (all of them are Objective-C, and they deal with pointers which I don't think exist in Swift in the same form). Is there any way to convert a NSData
object into an array of bytes in the form of [Uint8]
in Swift?
7 Answers
You can avoid first initialising the array to placeholder values, if you go through pointers in a slightly convoluted manner, or via the new Array
constructor introduced in Swift 3:
Swift 3
let data = "foo".data(using: .utf8)!
// new constructor:
let array = [UInt8](data)
// …or old style through pointers:
let array = data.withUnsafeBytes {
[UInt8](UnsafeBufferPointer(start: $0, count: data.count))
}
Swift 2
Array(UnsafeBufferPointer(start: UnsafePointer<UInt8>(data.bytes), count: data.length))
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2@califrench I'm sorry, I didn't follow. 1) There is no
NSArray
that I can spot, thebytes
accessor does not return it. 2) What errors would it cause down the road? If you're referring to possible unavailability ofNS*
classes, recall that the question specifiesNSData
.– ArkkuMay 24, 2016 at 21:35 -
1I'm sorry @Arkku, I got confused, I was thinking for a minute that
Array()
was relying onNSArray
but I don't think it is... The issues down the road would have been trying to access an element using a subscript sinceNSArray
s don't know what kind of elements they contain whereas SwiftArray
s do. May 25, 2016 at 22:19 -
1@Dan It works just fine for me both in Swift 2.2 and Swift 3. In Swift 3 the preceding line is
let data : NSData! = "foo".data(using: String.Encoding.utf8)
– ArkkuJun 26, 2016 at 11:11 -
1@Arkku it doesn't compile with latest Swift, I had to change it to: array = data.withUnsafeBytes { bytes in Array( UnsafeBufferPointer(start: bytes, count: data.count) ) }– ZmeyJun 30, 2016 at 0:07
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1@LeoDabus That's basically a different way of saying
[UInt8](data)
, which is already in the answer since the latest edit. (And IMO the clearer syntax with explicit type.)– ArkkuDec 13, 2016 at 20:21
Swift 5 Solution
Data to [bytes]
extension Data {
var bytes: [UInt8] {
return [UInt8](self)
}
}
[bytes] to Data
extension Array where Element == UInt8 {
var data: Data {
return Data(self)
}
}
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1
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1
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Apologies if this is a silly question, but this would produce a copy, right? Jun 12, 2020 at 16:20
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@TobiSchweiger yes because arrays are always value types in Swift, so arrays always copy Jul 27, 2023 at 20:06
It's funny but exist more simple solution. Works in Swift 3. Surely. I've used this today.
data: Data // as function parameter
let byteArray = [UInt8](data)
That's all! :) NSData easily bridged to Data.
UPDATE: (due to Andrew Koster comment)
Swift 4.1, Xcode 9.3.1
Just has been rechecked - all works as expected.
if let nsData = NSData(base64Encoded: "VGVzdFN0cmluZw==", options: .ignoreUnknownCharacters) {
let bytes = [UInt8](nsData as Data)
print(bytes, String(bytes: bytes, encoding: .utf8))
Output: [84, 101, 115, 116, 83, 116, 114, 105, 110, 103] Optional("TestString")
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1
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This most likely makes a copy of your data. While small, not a big deal. If large, can cause a lot of issues.– LukeNov 14, 2016 at 21:24
You can use the getBytes
function of NSData
to get the byte array equivalent.
As you did not provide any source code, I will use a Swift String contents that has been converted to NSData.
var string = "Hello World"
let data : NSData! = string.dataUsingEncoding(NSUTF8StringEncoding)
let count = data.length / sizeof(UInt8)
// create an array of Uint8
var array = [UInt8](count: count, repeatedValue: 0)
// copy bytes into array
data.getBytes(&array, length:count * sizeof(UInt8))
println(array)
Swift 3/4
let count = data.length / MemoryLayout<UInt8>.size
// create an array of Uint8
var byteArray = [UInt8](repeating: 0, count: count)
// copy bytes into array
data.getBytes(&byteArray, length:count)
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3
Swift 3/4
let data = Data(bytes: [0x01, 0x02, 0x03])
let byteArray: [UInt8] = data.map { $0 }
swift 4 and image data to a byte array.
func getArrayOfBytesFromImage(imageData:Data) ->[UInt8]{
let count = imageData.count / MemoryLayout<UInt8>.size
var byteArray = [UInt8](repeating: 0, count: count)
imageData.copyBytes(to: &byteArray, count:count)
return byteArray
}
You can try
extension Data {
func toByteArray() -> [UInt8]? {
var byteData = [UInt8](repeating:0, count: self.count)
self.copyBytes(to: &byteData, count: self.count)
return byteData
}
}